*The latest flags are supported, wheat now includes 253 different flags.

*The latest flags are supported, wheat now includes 253 different flags.

−

*Its now possible to login into a league with The Wheat Snooper. This feature provides registered user names and true ranks. At the moment the TUS league and NNN is supported.

+

*Its now possible to [http://www.tus-wa.com/forums/announcements/bringing-back-wn-ranks-and-registered-usernames/ login into a league with The Wheat Snooper]. This feature provides registered user names and true ranks. At the moment the TUS league and NNN is supported.

Skins

The Wheat Snooper is skinnable. Screenshots of some of the default skins:

Quake4 skin

Fractal skin

Worms World Party skin

Black skin

Sound notifications

Every sound can be activated and deactivated and you can choose your own sound file for each event. Also, the program includes default sound files in mp3 format.

The Wheat Snooper plays different sounds when:

A buddy arrives to WormNet

A buddy leaves WormNet

A buddy sends a message

A chat window opens

A normal user sends a message

You are highlighted (when someone writes your name in the chat)

A buddy hosts a game

A customized word appears in the chat.

Furthermore, it plays a sound on start up.

Control panel alerts

Control panel alerts are blinking items in the control panel. You can activate and deactivate these.

The Wheat Snooper alerts you when:

Someone writes you a notice

Someone writes you a private message

You are highlighted (when someone writes your name into the chat)

Balloon messages

Balloon messages are little messages that appear over the tray icon. These messages can be activated or deactivated and you can set the number of messages inside a balloon (it remembers the history of the balloon messages and displays them).

The Wheat Snooper pops up a balloon when:

A buddy arrives to WormNet

A buddy leaves WormNet

When someone writes you a private message (the message will also be displayed in the balloon) - this will only happen when there is no chat window open for the messaging user

When a buddy hosts a game

Away and back notifications

These notifications can be activated and deactivated.

It sends your away message to a user that writes a private message,
and it sends a CTCP command to the user (\001away 'awaymessage'\001). The snooper will then display it in the status bar of your chat window and the user icon inside the channel windows will change to an away icon.

It sets you automatically to away when you are in a game.

It sends a notice to all users that wrote you a message when you was away, it also sends a CTCP command (\001back\001).

The chat windows have a status button, which you can use to ask for a user's status (\001status\001). In case he has The Wheat Snooper, he will then response with his status (\001away 'awaymessage'\001 or \001back\001).

The CTCP commands are only written to users with another clan name than Username (case-insensitive).

Sending several kinds of IRC messages

Sending these messages can be done by prefixing a short string before the message. This string must be the very first string of the message.

A notice can be send with >>, for example >>hello

An action inside a notice can be send with >>>, for example >>>is happy

An action can be send with >, for example >is happy

A ctcp command can be send with >!, for example >!default

Raw server commands can be send with /, for example /WHOWAS lookias

The snooper lets you set CTCP commands that others can send you to receive an automatic message. This automatic message is also settable.

For example, you set up the CTCP command 'default' and the message 'this is my default message'.
Another user can now send you the CTCP command default (with >!default) and he will receive 'this is my default message' from you.

This is a poor example, but imagine you can also response with messages that include download locations, pictures, website addresses, and everything else that fits into a message.

OK, lets go on with the message prefixes. Assuming you want to send a notice to a user, you would send it inside a chat window. If you send it into a channel it will be a notice that arrives to the channel. IRC clients normally send notices like this:

/notice user msg

This notice can of course be send in every chat line. To overcome this difference you can use the raw server command prefix. It will then be the same message:

/notice user msg, also: /privmsg user msg

It can be sent from every chat line.
This trick with the raw server command prefix doesn't work for actions and CTCP commands, because these messages need to be bound with ASCII 1 signs and you cannot type them manually into the chat.